From leftforum at leftforum.org Sat Oct 6 03:23:57 2018
From: leftforum at leftforum.org (Left Forum)
Date: Sat, 06 Oct 2018 04:23:57 -0400
Subject: [WSF-Discuss] This Fall 2018 Classes and other events on Marx And
Critical Theory: Left Academy
Message-ID:
LEFT FORUM SUPPORTS:
INSTITUTE FOR THE RADICAL IMAGINATION
Saturday Critical Thought Seminars start September 29th
@
The People's Forum 320 W 37 Street, NYC
THE FRANKFURT SCHOOL AND THE PARADOXICAL IDEA OF PROGRESS: THINKING BEYOND
CRITICAL THEORY WITH STANLEY ARONOWITZ (12:00 ? 2:00PM)
Register here [1]
_An eight week course - $15 per session or $100 for all eight sessions._
This course will address the idea of progress in History through a careful
and close reading of texts from Adorno and Horkheimer. Does progress really
exist beyond minor reformist tendencies or is it a major symptom of the
dialectic of enlightenment that dialectical positiv- ity comes to a
standstill? Can we rethink a new principle of hope that can build movement
politics against the cynicism and pessimism of the present?
MARX, MARXISM AND PHILOSOPHY TODAY?
WITH MICHAEL PELIAS (2:15?4:15PM)
Register here [2]
_A ten week course -- $15 per session or $125 for all ten sessions._
Marx's relationship to Philosophy from the Greek atomists through Aristotle
to Hegel has been commented upon by many in the Marxist tradition. Through
a general, yet rigorous survey, this class will examine Marx's use of
philosophical materialism in his early manuscripts as well as a critical
and analytical approach to the schools of Marxist philosophy that developed
with and after the work of Lukacs, Gramsci, Korsch, and the Frankfurt
school through the French existentialists and structuralists to the Italian
schools from Della Volpe to Negri.
DEMOCRACY AND MARXISM WITH PETER BRATSIS (4:30 ? 6:30PM)
Register here [3]
_An eight week course -- $15 per session or $100 for all eight sessions._
The ethic of democracy is central to the project of Marxism. This class
will examine the concept of democracy and how it has been incor- porated
within the Marxist tradition. The Marxist critique of liberal 'democracy'
and the relation of democracy to human creation as well as economic
production will also be interrogated. Readings will include works from
Aristotle, Marx, Gramsci, Pannekoek, Luxemburg, Castoriadis, and
Poulantzas.
DEMOCRACY AT WORK
2. Sunday Intensives: two sessions 12 noon - 4pm, Sept 30 and Oct 7, with
Richard D. Wolff
@
The People's Forum 320 W 37 Street, NYC
Marxian Economics intensives with Richard D. Wolff
September 30th and October 7th
(12:00 ? 4:00PM)
Register here [4]
_Session 1: Sunday , Sept. 30: Marxian Class Analysis: What it is and its
Value for Understanding Society Today_
A Marxian class analysis around four areas of inquiry: Capitalist
enterprises- merchant, industrial, and financial; Households and the State;
Globalization; and Socialism and Communism.
_Session 2: Sunday, October 7: Comparing Marxian to Mainstream
("neoclassical") and Keynesian Economics_
This course aims to explain how these three significant yet very different
ways of understanding economics both reflect and shape modern societies'
political, cultural, and economic conflicts. Readings will be distributed
and Resnick, S. and Wolff, R., Contending Economic Theories: Neoclassical,
Keynesian, and Marxian, MIT Press, 2012 will serve as background to the day
long Sunday seminar.
THE MARXIST EDUCATION PROJECT
Introduction to Marxism for Women Only with Juliet Ucelli
@
The People's Forum 320 W 37 Street, NYC
INTRODUCTION TO MARXISM FOR WOMEN ONLY WITH JULIET UCELLI
TUESDAYS, 6:30 TO 8:30 PM
Register here [5]
_10 sessions, October 2 through December 4_
We'll explore some key concepts about human beings, society and history,
and our relationship to the rest of nature. Readings will be short and
accessible excerpts from writings by Marx and Engels or later Marxists. I
believe that this theory can help us analyze the social and economic
realities and structures we live in-who holds power and how-and fight more
effectively for liberation.
Some of the central questions that we'll address are:
* How did the oppression of women, and the division of societies into
people who work and others who exploit them, originate and develop
historically?
* What are the driving dynamics of capitalism that make it make it so
productive, innovative, brutal and ecologically destructive?
* What intellectual tools can help us understand industry's complex
impacts on our bodies, our psyches and the nature around us--impacts that
capitalists, and people who think like them, don't want to see or cannot
see?
* What did Marx understand--and not understand--about white supremacy and
Eurocentrism, and how has that analysis been deepened and modified by later
Marxists?
In a continuing attempt to increase access for those who have been
historically excluded, turned off or silenced by the way this theory is
often taught and discussed, we are offering an intro class this October
through December for women only. Everyone who identifies as a woman is
welcome.
Juliet Ucelli has taught labor economics and class/race/gender for unions
and activists, and writes on Eurocentrism in Marxist theory, and Marxist
understandings of human development. She also teaches Marx's Capital,
Volume One with The Marxist Education Project.
SEE MORE CLASSES OF MARXIST EDUCATION PROJECT:
1968 AND AFTER
11 Classes start:
Mon, October 8 @ 7:30 PM - 9:30 PM
The Brooklyn Commons
388 Atlantic Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11217
Website:
thecommonsbrooklyn.org [6]
Register here [7]
THE REVOLUTIONARY ASPIRATIONS OF THE NEW LEFT
REVOLUTIONS STUDY GROUP
Fifty years ago, the political-military blocs of the Cold War had ossified,
social democracy and labor unions in the West were tamed, and struggles for
change in Eastern Europe and Latin America seemed to have been controlled
by combinations of sticks and carrots. Then, in the year 1968, in France,
Italy, the United States, Czechoslovakia, Mexico, etc. there were immense
uprisings against the status quo. This fall, we will study this watershed
period (1968-1974) considering the achievements and failures of the Left in
the 1960s. We will read Chris Harman's The Fire Last Time (2nd revised ed.
1998), linking the events of 1968 and what carried these events forward.
The REVOLUTIONS STUDY GROUP (started at the Brecht Forum) has met since
2009. Participants have come and gone, however the group has held together,
studying in depth a wide range of history including the French Revolution,
the Russian Revolutions of 1905 and 1917, the Mau-Mau Revolt in Kenya, the
Haitian Revolution, the 1848 European Revolutions, the May 68 movement in
France and the Hot Autumn of Italy and much more.
Class, Race & Gender
5 Classes start:
Tue, October 9 @ 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
The Brooklyn Commons
388 Atlantic Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11217
Website:
thecommonsbrooklyn.org [6]
Register here [8]
CONTEMPORARY CAPITALISM AND THE LIMITS OF IDENTITY POLITICS?
Six-week session with DAN KARAN
The ongoing debate between those arguing for either a class- or
identity-based politics has led to a tragic split between forces that
ultimately need to come together if each is to realize its goals. But
should this even be an "either or" question when considered from the
vantage point of trying to build an effective anti-capitalist movement
struggling for the liberation of those exploited and oppressed by capital?
What may be surprising to some is that this split is not new and in the
U.S. has roots that go back to the nation's founding if not before. And, in
the 19th century, while the Civil War is often referred to as the "second
American Revolution" it was really during Reconstruction, the period just
after the Civil War, in which a "self-emancipatory" moment opened as former
slaves, working class whites and women struggled to realize the promise of
"life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" held out in Declaration of
Independence. Yet divisions along class, race and gender lines sealed
Reconstruction's defeat. Why and how was this potentially revolutionary
moment defeated and what should this history teach us about the strategies
and tactics that the left needs to employ today?
To explore these issues of the intersection of class, race and gender in
the US and the consequences of not being able to overcome the divisions
that capitalism reinforces and exploits for its own purposes this class
will read David Roediger's recent book on Reconstruction: _Seizing Freedom:
Slave Emancipation and Liberty for All_. This class will be the first in an
ongoing series that explore questions of the relationship between class,
race, gender and sexuality and how we overcome the divide between those
exploited by capitalism and create a genuine anti-capitalist movement of
liberation for all.
DAN KARAN is a "red diaper baby" born into a communist household (his
father worked as an organizer for the Communist Party and both his parents
were members for roughly 25 years until leaving in 1956 along with many
other comrades in response to Khrushchev's "On the Cult of Personality and
its Consequences" speech about Stalin). Dan's political activism began at
the age of 2 when his parents took him to the 1963 March on Washington. For
the last 30 years he has worked for NYC nonprofit housing and community
development organizations. He is a proud graduate school dropout who has
been studying Marxist theory for more than 4 decades.
Dan Karan is a "red diaper baby" born into a communist household (his
father worked as an organizer for the Communist Party and both his parents
were members for roughly 25 years until leaving in 1956 along with many
other comrades in response to Khrushchev's "On the Cult of Personality and
its Consequences" speech about Stalin). Dan's political activism began at
the age of 2 when his parents took him to the 1963 March on Washington. For
the last 30 years he has worked for NYC nonprofit housing and community
development organizations. He is a proud graduate school dropout who has
been studying Marxist theory for more than 4 decades.
Capital, Energy and Power
10 Classes start:
Wed, October 10 @ 6:00 PM - 7:30 PM
The Brooklyn Commons
388 Atlantic Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11217
Website:
thecommonsbrooklyn.org [6]
Register here [9]
A 10-WEEK STUDY GROUP WITH FRED MURPHY AND STEVE KNIGHT
Throughout the history of capitalism, energy sources and especially fossil
fuels--coal, oil and natural gas--have been critical to the system's
economic viability. The crises associated with climate change are rooted in
capital's insatiable need to burn fuels in order to accumulate wealth and
maximize profits. Competition and greed for readily extractable energy
resources have fueled wars and evoked popular resistance, especially in the
Middle East. This study group will explore the history and political
economy of oil, energy and capitalism. We will read George Caffentzis's
recently published No Blood for Oil! and related work by Michael Klare,
Andreas Malm, Timothy Mitchell, and others.
FRED MURPHY has co-led several MEP study groups on Marxism, science,
nature, and ecosocialism. He studied and taught historical sociology at the
New School for Social Research.
STEVE KNIGHT has been a co-leader of MEP eco-socialist study groups since
2015. He is also a climate activist with the DSA and faith-centered groups,
and reviews books on eco-socialism for Marx & Philosophy
Degenerate Art and The State
Classes start:
Wed, October 10 @ 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
THE PEOPLE?S FORUM
320 WEST 37TH STREET
NEW YORK, NY 10018
WEBSITE:
https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131912&qid=6429213 [10]
Register here [11]
PART II: NOTES OF DISCORD
An 8-week study with JERAMY TURNER and JACK SHNEIDMAN
It is not our fellow artist who is the enemy, but those who have made art
the booty of exploitation, and who use it as a deodorant for war and
fascism.
--Arnold Blanch, First American Artists Congress, 1936
Art can become an alternative form of revolt that both deepens our
consciousness and inspires resistance. We will explore selected pieces of
music, visual art, and including two exemplary, radical films: Soleil O
(dir. Mel Hondo, France/Mauritania, 1967), a scathing attack on colonialism
and capitalism; and Council of the Gods, (dir. Kurt Maetzig, East Germany,
1950) a fictional film linking Monsanto, Rockefeller, and Hitler. Music
selections will include works by John Coltrane (1926-1967), American jazz
saxophonist, composer, and civil rights activist; Charles Haden (1938-2014)
of the Charlie Haden Liberation Music Orchestra, American jazz bassist and
composer, also engaged in anti-war and anti-imperialist movements; and
Frederic Rzewski (1938- ), American composer and pianist, engaged in
anti-prison industrial complex activity, as well as being an anti-fascist
agitator. Among visual art considered will be work by German muralist
Werner Tuebke (1929-2004), including Peasant Wars panorama; Josep Renau
(1907-1982) Spanish Civil War Communist, with photomontages of great power
and beauty; and Edward Keinholz (1927-1994), American anti-imperialist,
anti-U.S. sculptor from the 1960s.
JACK SHNEIDMAN earned a BFA from SUNY Purchase, and an MA from the City
College of New York in music composition and jazz performance,
respectively. He is the author of the instructional book, 1001 Jazz Licks
published by the Cherry Lane Music Company (2000). He has led jazz
ensembles in the New York area, and has also performed in Japan and London.
He lectured at LaGuardia Community College for seven years.
JERAMY TURNER's primary concern for many years has been the appropriation
of visual art and film for the purpose of countering ruling class hegemony.
>From 1975-1992, she directed alternative movie theaters in Chicago and
Minneapolis, and edited the cinema journal, Shattering Screen. In 1986 she
taught herself oil painting so as to visually depict the vulnerability of
capitalism, and has been painting in this mode ever since. She established
the radical feminist art collective, Sister Serpents in 1989, which Jesse
Helmes decried as a "hate group" against unborn children. She has taught
and lectured on the conjuncture of political involvement in art and
feminism at numerous universities and institutions in the US (Chicago,
Boulder, Jersey City, Cornell University). Her work has been exhibited in
London, Berlin, Vienna, Stockholm, Hamburg, Bergen (Norway), and at many
alternative and university galleries throughout the US. She lives in
Brooklyn and Aigen, Austria. Her paintings can be seen at
www.jeramyturner.com.
"A Screaming Comes Across The Sky?"
Classes start:
Thu, October 11 @ 7:30 PM - 9:30 PM
The Brooklyn Commons
388 Atlantic Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11217
Website:
thecommonsbrooklyn.org [6]
Register here [12]
2 NOVELS OF WORLD WAR II: UNFORGIVING YEARS AND GRAVITY?S RAINBOW
The sessions title can apply to sections of both works
First 5 Thursdays
September 27 - October 25
Victor Serge's _Unforgiving Years_
These five sessions will be conducted with the guidance of Richard Greeman
" Unforgiving Years?has now at last been translated into electric English
by the indefatigable Richard Greeman?It's a seething, hallucinatory
novel?" --Harper's
"I know of no other writer with whom Serge can be very usefully compared.
The essence of the man and his books is to be found in his attitude to the
truth. There have of course been many scrupulously honest writers. But for
Serge the value of the truth extended far beyond the simple (or complex)
telling of it." -John Berger
>From RICHARD GREEMAN's Introduction to Unforgiving Years: Unforgiving Years
is divided into four sections, four symphonic "movements," each of which
evokes its distinctive time and place through its tone and atmosphere. The
first movement, entitled "The Secret Agent," expresses the sinister
unreality of a Paris indifferent to the approach of war in a chill minor
key. The second, "The Flame Beneath the Snow," is discordant, heroic, and
secret like one of Shostakovich's wartime symphonies. It portrays a frozen,
starving Leningrad during the "thousand days" of the Nazi siege. The third
movement, "Brigitte, Lightning, Lilacs," imagines the final days of Berlin
under Allied bombardment in a mode of Wagnerian Gotterdammerung, while the
final movement, "Journey's End," is a tragic requiem set in the stark,
volcanic Mexican selva where death and life repeat their endless cycle.
Copyright (c) 1971 by The Victor Serge Foundation
The remaining 7 Thursdays
Thomas Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow
Thursday, November 1 through Thursday, December 20 (no session on
Thursday, November 22)
with The MEP LIT GROUP
Gravity's Rainbow is a postmodern epic, a work as exhaustively significant
to the second half of the twentieth century as Joyce's Ulysses was to the
first. Its sprawling, encyclopedic narrative and penetrating analysis of
the impact of technology on society make it an intellectual tour de force.
"No, it is not unreadable. For most of its 700-plus pages it's so crazily,
scarily, sumptuously readable that you hate to put it aside even as the
last paragraph thunders down on your head. The unsummarizable plot centers,
to the extent that it centers at all, on Tyrone Slothrop, an American who
comes to the attention of British intelligence during World War II when a
map indicating the locales of his sexual encounters with London women shows
that they correspond with the places struck by German V-2 missiles. Can his
erections predict the random distribution of agents of death? From there we
proceed into a massive continent-wide effort to construct a V-2, which is
itself an occasion for a fantastic multitude of meditations upon the human
need to build systems of intellectual order even as we use the same powers
of intellect to hasten our destruction. (Did we mention that this is also a
comedy, more or less?) Among American writers of the second half of the
20th century, Pynchon is the undisputed candidate for lasting literary
greatness. This book is why." --Richard Pourier
Two works that demand our attention. Registration is open now..
RICHARD GREEMAN has led discussions of Balzac, Stendahl, Peter Weiss and
especially Victor Serge with The MEP and Brecht Forum since 2012. He
currently convenes the group Another World Is Possible with Fred Murphy and
others. He is a scholar of the life of Victor Serge and is the translator
of much of Serge's works.
The MEP LIT GROUP has been meeting discussing literature since the first
days of The Marxist Education Project. The group has recently completeda
second summer of readings of noir, considering works by Hammett, Chandler,
Manchette, and others. Other studies have included novels relatedto World
War I, the global depression of the 1930s and more.
Birth of the Binge
Fri, October 12 @ 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
The Brooklyn Commons
388 Atlantic Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11217
Website:
thecommonsbrooklyn.org [6]
Register here [13]
SERIAL TV, DIGITAL ACCUMULATION AND DISTRACTED AUDIENCES
DENNIS BROE
Dennis Broe'new book _Birth of the Binge: Serial TV and The End of Leisure_
is an attempt to alter the way serial television is viewed by, instead of
starting with the shows themselves or with serial fandom, first integrating
the form, which began at the opening of the neoliberal era in the early
1980s, into ongoing processes of the digital economy. The book views serial
television as a part of what Bernard Stiegler terms hyperindustrialism,
seeing the form and the delivery system which is part of its development as
adapting itself to more harried workers on the go and utilizing both
technological and narrative devices which foster addictive viewing and
participate in the validation of a new corporate autistic personality.
Streaming television is seen not as a revolutionary break, as many media
critics describe it, but as a continuation, often by the same
multinationals, of the old network processes in different and sometimes
more predatory forms. The form has also spawned series that critique both
this process and the offline forms of extraction that are growing more and
more deadly. Broe's talk on the book will also encompass new developments
in resistant cinema, particularly in the case of Italian cinema which, like
serial television series, operates in a constrained and dangerous
atmosphere in truthtelling and which must then find ever more ingenious
ways of deniability of the truth it is unfolding. This will be discussed in
the context of the Yellow-Green of the far-right League and the Populist
Five Star Parties.
DENNIS BROE, who has taught in the Television Studies Master's Program at
the Sorbonne, is also the author of _Maverick: Or How the West Was Lost;
Class Crime and International Film Noir: Globalizing America's Dark Art;
Film Noir, American Workers and Postwar Hollywood and Cold War
Expressionism: Perverting the Politics of Perception_. His television
series: TV on TV is on Art District TV in Paris and he is a critic for Arts
Express on the Pacifica Radio Network.
Music, Rebellion, Repression
Wed, October 17 @ 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM
The People's Forum
320 West 37th Street
New York, NY 10018
Website:
https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131912&qid=6429213 [10]
Register here [14]
TWO AUTHORS AND A DJ
_Folksingers and the FBI_ by AARON LEONARD
Some of the most prominent folk singers of the 20th Century, Woody
Guthrie, 'Sis Cunningham, Pete Seeger, Burl Ives, etc., were also political
activists with various associations with the American Communist Party. As a
consequence the FBI, kept meticulous files running many thousands of pages
on them. Using music, video selections, news clippings, and records from
extensive Freedom of Information Act filings -- including never before
released material -- this presentation will bring to life these artists and
the systematic way
The _Explosion of Deferred Dreams_ by MAT CALLAHAN
The book's impassioned arguments both expose and reframe the political and
social context for the San Francisco Sound and the vibrant subcultural
uprisings with which it is associated. Using dozens of original interviews,
primary sources, and personal experiences, Callahan shows how the intense
interplay of artistic and political movements put San Francisco, briefly,
in the forefront of a worldwide revolutionary upsurge. A must-read for
anyone who "was there" (or longed to have been).
with DJ DENNIS O?NEIL
MAT CALLAHAN is a musician and author. Most recently he re-published _Songs
of Freedom_ by James Connolly and launched the _Songs of Slavery and
Emancipation_ project. He is the author of five books including in 2017
_The Explosion of Deferred Dreams and A Critical Guide to Intellectual
Property_. Callahan resides in Bern Switzerland.
AARON LEONARD is author of _Heavy Radicals: The FBI's Secret War on
America's Maoists_, and _A Threat of the First Magnitude--FBI
Counterintelligence & Infiltration: From the Communist Party to the
Revolutionary Union_. A regular contributor to Truthout and HNN.us, he
lives in Los Angeles.
Pictures of a Gone City
Fri, October 19 @ 7:00 PM - 9:00 PM
THE BROOKLYN COMMONS
388 ATLANTIC AVENUE
BROOKLYN, NY 11217
WEBSITE:
THECOMMONSBROOKLYN.ORG [6]
?
Register here [15]
TECH AND THE DARK SIDE OF PROSPERITY IN THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA
RICHARD A. WALKER
_presented with_ PM Press
The San Francisco Bay Area is currently the jewel in the crown of
capitalism--the tech capital of the world and a gusher of wealth from the
Silicon Gold Rush. It has been generating jobs, spawning new innovation,
and spreading ideas that are changing lives everywhere. It boasts of being
the Left Coast, the Greenest City, and the best place for workers in the
USA. So what could be wrong? It may seem that the Bay Area has the best of
it in Trump's America, but there is a dark side of success: overheated
bubbles and spectacular crashes; exploding inequality and millions of
underpaid workers; a boiling housing crisis, mass displacement, and severe
environmental damage; a delusional tech elite and complicity with the worst
in American politics.
This sweeping account of the Bay Area in the age of the tech boom covers
many bases. It begins with the phenomenal concentration of IT in Greater
Silicon Valley, the fabulous economic growth of the bay region and the
unbelievable wealth piling up for the 1% and high incomes of Upper
Classes--in contrast to the fate of the working class and people of color
earning poverty wages and struggling to keep their heads above water. The
middle chapters survey the urban scene, including the greatest housing
bubble in the United States, a metropolis exploding in every direction, and
a geography turned inside out. Lastly, it hits the environmental impact of
the boom, the fantastical ideology of TechWorld, and the political
implications of the tech-led transformation of the bay region.
"With Pictures of a Gone City, California's greatest geographer tells us
how the Bay Area has become the global center of hi-tech capitalism.
Drawing on a lifetime of research, Richard Walker dismantles the mythology
of the New Economy, placing its creativity in a long history of power,
work, and struggles for justice."
--JASON W. MOORE, author of _Capitalism in the Web of Life_
RICHARD A. WALKER is professor emeritus of geography at the University of
California, Berkeley, where he taught from 1975 to 2012. Walker has written
on a diverse range of topics in economic, urban, and environmental
geography, with scores of published articles to his credit. He is coauthor
of _The Capitalist Imperative_ (1989) and _The New Social Economy_ (1992)
and has written extensively on California, including _The Conquest of
Bread_ (2004), _The Country in the City_ (2007) and _The Atlas of
California_ (2013). He is currently director of the LIVING NEW DEAL
PROJECT, whose purpose is to inventory all New Deal public works sites in
the United States and recover the lost memory of government investment for
the good of all.
Publisher: PM Press/ Spectre
ISBN: 978-1-62963-510-1
Scientific Materialism I
Sat, October 27 @ 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM
THE BROOKLYN COMMONS
388 ATLANTIC AVENUE
BROOKLYN, NY 11217
WEBSITE:
THECOMMONSBROOKLYN.ORG [6]
?
Register here [16]
ANTIQUITY TO THE 18TH CENTURY
ALEX STEINBERG
Six Sessions
(No session November 24)
This series will introduce seminal moments in the search by humans for
understanding the natural world. If there is interest, we will continue in
the winter and spring of 2019 considering developments from the
Enlightenment to the present day.
_Weeks one and two_: Science begins. Ancient speculation on the nature of
reality in Greek. Thales, Heraclitus, Parmenides, Zeno, Pythagoras,
Democritus. We will also discuss some non-Western traditions in early
speculation about the nature of reality
_Weeks three and four:_ The first scientists and ancient astronomy.
Egyptian and Babylonian contributions. The first Greek scientists:
Anaximander, Aristotle, Aristarchus, Euclid, Ptolemy.
_Weeks five and six:_ Scientific Revolution - Copernicus to Newton,
Descartes, Diderot and the materialism of the Enlightenment.
ALEX STEINBERG has previously taught _Engels and the Dialectics of Nature_
at the Brecht Forum. At the Marxist Education Project he has taught
_Spectres of the Dialectic, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Fascism and the Left
Nietzscheans_ and _Dialectics 101_,along with organizing a discussion of
recent events in Greece and special events on _The Radicalism of James
Joyce._
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[6] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131908&qid=6429213
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[8] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131910&qid=6429213
[9] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131911&qid=6429213
[10] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131912&qid=6429213
[11] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131913&qid=6429213
[12] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131914&qid=6429213
[13] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131915&qid=6429213
[14] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131916&qid=6429213
[15] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131917&qid=6429213
[16] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131918&qid=6429213
[17] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131919&qid=6429213
[18] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131920&qid=6429213
[19] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131921&qid=6429213
[20] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131922&qid=6429213
[21] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131923&qid=6429213
[22] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/sites/all/modules/civicrm/extern/url.php?u=131924&qid=6429213
[23] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/civicrm/mailing/optout?reset=1&jid=7153&qid=6429213&h=34b3a39616fae32a
[24] https://leftforum.ourpowerbase.net/civicrm/mailing/unsubscribe?reset=1&jid=7153&qid=6429213&h=34b3a39616fae32a
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From susana_deranger at yahoo.ca Thu Oct 25 07:01:56 2018
From: susana_deranger at yahoo.ca (Susana Deranger)
Date: Thu, 25 Oct 2018 04:01:56 -0800
Subject: [WSF-Discuss] (no subject)
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http://mind.paulstokle.com
Susana Deranger
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